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Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies

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most recent guidelines for management of febrile neutropenia in children with cancer
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Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies. Mohammed El Shazly Lecturer ass. Clinical Oncology Alexandria Faculty of Medicine.
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Page 1: Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies

Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies.

Mohammed El ShazlyLecturer ass. Clinical OncologyAlexandria Faculty of Medicine.

Page 2: Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies

Definitions

Pathophysiology

Etiology

Assessment and evaluation

Management.

Page 3: Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies

Definitions

Fever: single oral 38.3 degree Celsius, or two consecutive temp greater than 38.0 in a 12 hour period lasting at least an hour.

Neutropenia: ANC <500/mm3 , <1000/mm3 before reaching the nadir.1

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Pathophysiology Innate

immunity

Adaptive immunity

Physiologic response

to infection

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PathophysiologyINNATE IMMUNITY

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Pathophysiology INNATE IMMUNITY Mucocuatenous barrier Local tumor invasion, Surgical removal of lesions, Radiation therapy, Graftversus-host disease (GVHD), Mucositis caused by cytotoxic chemotherapy Agents (eg, methotrexate, high-dose cytosine

arabinoside, and etoposide) , Indwelling surgical devices, Frequent blood draws compromise the

epidermal barrier.

Page 7: Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies

Pathophysiology INNATE IMMUNITY Phagocytic cells

qualitative

quantitative

1)Severity of neutropenia, 2)Rate of ANC decline (rapidly falling rate imposes a greater risk than chronic neutropenia 3)duration of neutropenia.

Impaired chemo attractant responsiveness, Bactericidal killing,and superoxide production

Page 8: Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies

Pathophysiology ADAPTIVE IMMUNITY

B and T cell populations responsible For regulating the humoral and cell-

mediated host response.

B cellsT cells

• Defective immunoglobulin synthesis

• Hypogammaglobulinemia

impairing the cellular immune response

Increase susceptibility to infection

Bacterial esp. encapsulated, fungal, and viral organisms, intracellular organisms.

Page 9: Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies

PathophysiologyPHYSIOLOGIC COMPENSATION TO INFECTION

Lung RLD

Heart cardiomyopathy

Cranial irradiation pituitary dysfunction

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Etiology

When a source is identified, 85% to 90% of the pathogens are either gram-positive or gram-negative bacteria.

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Page 12: Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies

RISK FACTORS

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ASSESSMENT AND EVALUATIONHistory

Neutropenic patient has a decreased response to inflammation.

Symptoms e.g. pain on defecation.

Exposures e.g. home, school.

CVAD

Medications

Immunization status.

Page 14: Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies

ASSESSMENT AND EVALUATIONPhysical examination

Vital signs T, RR, HR, B.P, Wt, pulse oximetery, Cappillary filling time.

HEENT mucosal integrity , moisture, discoloration.

Chesttachypnea

Abd pancreatitis, typhilitis

Surgical sites CVAD, VP shunt, biopsy site.

Page 15: Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies

ASSESSMENT AND EVALUATIONLaboratory tests

CBC with manual diff.

Blood Culture from CVC and peripheral.

CXR if indicated

Culture from any catheter

Clean catch or mid stream urine sample is available.

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Page 17: Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies

Management

Patient characteristics

Clinical presentation

Local infrastructure to support different models of care, drug availability ,cost and local epidemiology including patterns of resistance

Page 18: Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies

Management

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Management

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Empiric broad-spectrum antibiotics

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Page 30: Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies

In neutropenic IFD high-risk children, initiate empiric antifungal treatment for persistent or recurrent fever of unclear etiology that is unresponsive to prolonged (> 96 hours) broad-spectrum antibacterial agents (1C; strong recommendation). In neutropenic IFD low-risk children, consider empiric antifungal therapy in the setting of persistent FN (2C; weak recommendation).

Use either caspofungin or liposomal amphotericin B (L-AmB) for empiric antifungal therapy (1A; strong recommendation ).

Page 31: Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies

Echinocandin mechanism of action involves a target specific for fungus

• Echinocandin is a noncompetitive inhibitor of 1,3--D-glucan synthase

-D-glucan is essential to fungal cell wall integrity

¾ Enzyme is present in fungal, but not mammalian cells

¾ Without it, fungal cells are osmotically fragile and easily lysed

Page 32: Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies

Intravenousonly

Echoncandin metabolism and elimination differ from each other

OATP=Organic anion-transporting polypeptide.

Biliaryelimination

Urine

Caspofungin

Micafungin COMT

OATP-1B1N-acetylation

Anidulafungin Slo

w

ch

em

ical

deg

rad

ati

on

COMT=Catechol-O-methyltransferase.

Page 33: Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies

Echinocandins have different complex metabolism and interaction profile

Caspofungin Micafungin Anidulafungin

Hepatic metabolism?

Yes (N-acetylation)

Yes (Arylsulfatase and

catechol-O-methyltransferase;

some CYP3A hydroxylation)

No

CYP3A4 inhibitor?

No, but interact with Inducers Weak No

DrugInteractions?

Cyclosporine; TacrolimusRifampin; Efavirenz;

Nevirapine; Phenytoin; Dexamethasone;Carbamazepine

SirolimusNifedipine No known interactions

Dose adjustments?

Yes Moderate to severe

hepatic insufficiencyand/or

With CYP inducers

No No

Cancidas [Summary of Product Characteristics]. Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire, UK: Merck Sharp & Dohme Limited; 2007.Mycamine for Injection [package insert]. Tokyo, Japan: Astellas Pharma, Inc; 2006.Ecalta [Summary of Product Characteristics]. Sandwich, Kent; UK: Pfizer Limited; June 2007. DRAFT.

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Comparison of major properties and key pharmacokinetic parameters of echinocandins in adults

Sharon C.-A. Chen, Monica A. Slavin and Tania C. Sorrell.Echinocandin Antifungal Drugs in Fungal Infections. Drugs 2011; 71 (1): 11-41

Page 35: Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies

Sharon C.-A. Chen, Monica A. Slavin and Tania C. Sorrell.Echinocandin Antifungal Drugs in Fungal Infections. Drugs 2011; 71 (1): 11-41

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Challenges

Escalation of antibiotics….?

optimum duration for antibiotic adminstration in high risk patients pizzo ’79.

Optimum antifungal treatment.

Page 37: Febrile neutropenia in pediatric malignancies

References 1. Hughes WT, Bodey GP, Bow EJ, et al. Guidelines for the use of antimicrobial agents in neutropenic patients with cancer. Clin Infect Dis 2002;34:730–51. 2. Cerutti A, Rescigno M. The biology of intestinal immunoglobulin A responses. Immunity 2008;28(6):740–50. 3. Schenk M, Mueller C. The mucosal immune system at the gastrointestinal barrier. Best Pract Res Clin Gastroenterol 2008;22(3):391–409. 4. Pastva AM, Wright JR, Williams KL. Immunomodulatory roles of surfactant proteins A and D: implications in lung disease. Proc Am Thorac Soc 2007; 4(3):252–7. 5. Hussain S. Role of surfactant protein A in the innate host defense and autoimmunity. Autoimmunity 2004;37(2):125–30. 6. Sano H, Kuroki Y. The lung collectins, SP-A and SP-D, modulate pulmonary innate immunity. Mol Immunol 2005;42(3):279–87. 7. Bodey GP, Buckley M, Sathe YS, et al. Quantitative relationships between circulating leukocytes and infection in patients with acute leukemia. Ann Intern Med 1966;64(2):328–40. 8. Pickering LK, Anderson DC, Choi S, et al. Leukocyte function in children with malignancies. Cancer 1975;35(5):1365–71. 9. McCormack RT, Nelson RD, Bloomfield CD, et al. Neutrophil function in lymphoreticular malignancy. Cancer 1979;44(3):920–6.

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10. Baehner RL, Neiburger RG, Johnson DE, et al. Transient bactericidal defect of peripheral blood phagocytes from children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia receiving craniospinal irradiation. N Engl J Med 1973;289(23):1209–13.

11. Hersh EV, Gutterman JU, Mavligit GM. Effect of haematological malignancies and their treatment on host defence factors. Clin Haematol 1976;5(2):425–48.

12. Roilides E, Uhlig K, Venzon D, et al. Prevention of corticosteroid-induced suppression of human polymorphonuclear leukocyte-induced damage of Aspergillus

fumigatus hyphae by granulocyte colony-stimulating factor and gamma interferon. Infect Immun 1993;61(11):4870–7. 13. Berenguer J, Allende MC, Lee JW, et al. Pathogenesis of pulmonary aspergillosis. Granulocytopenia versus

cyclosporine and methylprednisolone-induced immunosuppression. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 1995;152(3):1079–86. 14. Lionakis MS, Kontoyiannis DP. Glucocorticoids and invasive fungal infections. Lancet 2003;362(9398):1828–38. 15. Mackall CL, Fleisher TA, Brown MR, et al. Age, thymopoiesis, and CD41 T-lymphocyte regeneration after intensive

chemotherapy. N Engl J Med 1995; 332(3):143–9. 16. Fisher RI, DeVita VT Jr, Bostick F, et al. Persistent immunologic abnormalities in long-term survivors of advanced

Hodgkin’s disease. Ann Intern Med 1980;92(5): 595–9. 17. Bakhshi S, Padmanjali KS, Arya LS. Infections in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia: an analysis of 222 febrile

neutropenic episodes. Pediatr Hematol Oncol 2008;25(5):385–92. 18. Stabell N, Nordal E, Stensvold E, et al. Febrile neutropenia in children with cancer: a retrospective Norwegian

multicentre study of clinical and microbiological outcome. Scand J Infect Dis 2008;40(4):301–7. 19. Katsimpardi K, Papadakis V, Pangalis A, et al. Infections in a pediatric patient cohort with acute lymphoblastic leukemia during the entire course of treatment. Support Care Cancer 2006;14(3):277–84.

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THANK YOU


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